Blankinship v. Oklahoma City Light & Water Power Co.

1896 OK 5, 43 P. 1088, 4 Okla. 242, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 36
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1896 OK 5 (Blankinship v. Oklahoma City Light & Water Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankinship v. Oklahoma City Light & Water Power Co., 1896 OK 5, 43 P. 1088, 4 Okla. 242, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 36 (Okla. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

MoAtee, J.:

This suit was brought by the Southern Distilling company in the probate court of Oklahoma county on the 6th day of July, 1893, against the defendants, to recover two barrels of whiskey, or their value, alleged at one hundred and sixty dollars.

A general denial was filed by all the defendants except Clark and White, who answered that they held the whiskey in controversy by reason of writs of attachment *243 placed in tbeir hands as constables of Oklahoma county, Oklahoma Territory, and that the property in said whiskey was in M. Winter.

It was admitted in the reply that defendants, Clark •and White, were constables, and held the whiskey by virtue of the writs of attachment mentioned. All other allegations in the said answers were denied, except as .stated.

The issues having been made up, the plaintiffs and defendants thereupon filed an agreed statement of facts in the cause on the 22d day of July, 1893, as follows:

“TERRITORY OE OKLAHOMA, OKLAHOMA OoüNTY, SS:
“In Probate Court, before S. A. Steward, Judge.
■“Southern Distilling Co., plaintiff, v. Oklahoma City Light and Water Power Co.; Charles Clark, as constable; T. C. Rice, M. R. Krausnick and G. W. White, as constables, defendants.
“STIPULATION.
“ It is hereby agreed by and between the above named plaintiff and the defendants, and each and all of them, that the facts in the above entitled cause are as follows, and that the said court may enter judgment accordingly, the same as if such facts had appeared from the preponderance of the testimony, duly and properly given in said court upon the trial of this cause, and that such judgment may be made and entered, without reference to formality as to the time of setting said cause; such .facts so agreed upon being these, to-wit:
“That the property in controversy, to-wit: two barrels of whiskey, were sold by the plaintiff to one Myer Winter for a consideration of $165, and a few days prior to the commencement of this action, and said goods are of the value of said sum; that the plaintiff is a non-resident' and is doing business in Dallas, in the state of Texas, and was doing business when said goods were so sold, and that said Myer Winter was doing business in said Oklahoma City, said county and territory at the *244 same time, and that said goods were sold on credit and were shipped by the plaintiff to said Myer Winter at. Oklahoma City, and there received by him and kept, unopened and unusued for some four or five days; and that the said Winter being unable to pay all of his lawful, debts as they fell due, and not having the ready money for that purpose, placed said goods in the hands of a drayman in Oklahoma City for the purpose of returning the same to the plaintiff in payment of the purchase-price thereof; that said goods were detained by said drayman for some time, and then under the express directions of said Winter were taken to the Atchison,. Topeka & Santa Fe depot in said city and delivered to said railroad company to be shipped to the plaintiff at Dallas, in the state of Texas, (that evidence may be taken that a bill of lading therefor was executed by the agent, of said company and delivered to said drayman,) and said goods left in -the custody, possession and charge of said railroad company, so consigned by 'said Winter to the plaintiff; that the consignment of said goods, by said Winter, to the plaintiff was agreeable and acceptable to the plaintiff, in payment of the purchase price therefor; and that from the time said goods were so delivered to-said drayman they were never returned to the possession of said Winter, he having immediately quit the country and exercised no further control or authority over the-same; that said indebtedness was bona fide, and said sum a fair value and consideration for said goods, and all of' said transactions were had, and said acts done, before any actions were brought by any of the creditors of said Myer Winter; but afterward actions in attachment were-brought by several of the creditors of the said Myer Winter, among whom are some of the defendants herein, and orders in attachment were issued and levied on the goods here in question, which were taken into the possession of the constables above named, who are defendants herein and were in their possession at the time this action was brought under such order in attachment, and that this action is brought by the plaintiff after demand to recover the possession from the defendants of said *245 goods; the contention of the plaintiff being that its rights in the premises to the possession of said property are superior to the rights of said officers under said order ■of attachment.
“Dated this 22nd day of July, 1893.
“SOUTHERN DISTILLING Co.,
-“By Bogees & Howaed, their Attorneys. Plaintiff.
“Oiilahoma City Light and Power Co.,
“By Selwyn Douglas, Attorney.
“Clark & Burwell, Attorneys for Krausnick. ”

Upon which said agreed statement of facts trial was had, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, plaintiff in error here, for the possession of said whiskey and the costs of suit.

Defendants in error appealed to the district court of Oklahoma county, and a trial was there had before the court without a jury, upon the same pleadings as in the probate court, with the exception that B. Blankinship, receiver of the Southern Distilling Company, was substituted for the plaintiff by order of the district court, and a finding made for defendants in error.

At the hearing of the cause in the district court on March 15, 1896, the plaintiff, in order to maintain the issues on his part, offered to introduce to the court as evidence of the facts in said case, the stipulation and ■agreed statement of facts as above set forth, and as theretofore agreed upon and filed in the probate court; to the introduction of which the defendants objected, which objection was by the court sustained, and to which ruling ■of the court, the plaintiff excepted.

The court thereupon proceeded to hear testimony in the case, contradictory to material statements made in the written statements of facts, as agreed upon in the probate court. No motion or application was made by *246 the defendants in error to amend or strike out tlie statement of facts, as filed in the probate court, before the trial began. The cause went to trial without such motion, the written stipulation still standing upon the record unchallenged, and no application up to that time-having been made for its exclusion on the ground of newly discovered evidence, or because its statements, were contrary to the facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1896 OK 5, 43 P. 1088, 4 Okla. 242, 1896 Okla. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankinship-v-oklahoma-city-light-water-power-co-okla-1896.